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"Russia to upgrade nuclear systems" !

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"Russia to upgrade nuclear systems" "!" :tup:

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has announced plans to build a "guaranteed nuclear deterrent system" to be in place by 2020.

He said he wanted military chiefs to submit plans by December.

He called for a programme to build new nuclear submarines as well as "a system of aerospace defence".

The announcement comes just weeks after Russia accused America of starting a new arms race by siting part of its missile defence shield in Poland.

"We must guarantee nuclear deterrence under various political and military conditions by 2020," Mr Medvedev told military commanders.

He said it was necessary to build "new types of armaments", and to "achieve dominance in airspace", according to quotes carried by the Itar-Tass news agency.

"We plan to start serial production of warships, primarily nuclear-powered submarines carrying cruise missiles and multifunctional submarines," Mr Medvedev said.

"We will develop an aerospace defence system, as well," he added.

Story from BBC NEWS:
BBC NEWS | Europe | Russia to upgrade nuclear systems

Published: 2008/09/26 15:30:19 GMT

© BBC MMVIII
 
"Russia to upgrade nuclear systems" "!" :tup:

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has announced plans to build a "guaranteed nuclear deterrent system" to be in place by 2020.

He said he wanted military chiefs to submit plans by December.

He called for a programme to build new nuclear submarines as well as "a system of aerospace defence".

The announcement comes just weeks after Russia accused America of starting a new arms race by siting part of its missile defence shield in Poland.

"We must guarantee nuclear deterrence under various political and military conditions by 2020," Mr Medvedev told military commanders.

He said it was necessary to build "new types of armaments", and to "achieve dominance in airspace", according to quotes carried by the Itar-Tass news agency.

"We plan to start serial production of warships, primarily nuclear-powered submarines carrying cruise missiles and multifunctional submarines," Mr Medvedev said.

I am all for Russia's resurgence, but if they are going to build more nukes, then its gonna be bad news for the whole world. More nukes = more risk of terrorists getting one + more risk of accidents (chernobyl). I hope they modify their missiles rather than assembling more warheads.

"We will develop an aerospace defence system, as well," he added.

Damn! Is it me or does it sound like they are gonna put nukes in space?
 
Russia acts against 'false' history

By James Rodgers
BBC News

What is worrying Russia? Why is the country convinced that it is the victim of a campaign to make it look bad?

President Dmitry Medvedev recently announced the setting up of a commission to counter the falsification of history. He said this was becoming increasingly "severe, evil, and aggressive".


"This is absolute poppycock," says Robert Service, professor of Russian History at Oxford University. "History is all about argument. There is no absolute historical truth about anything big in history."

Mr Service dismisses the Russian leader's suggestion that his country is facing some kind of academic aggression.

Instead, he sees a desire to dominate, worthy of the most repressive totalitarian regimes of fiction.

"President Medvedev, following in the path of his predecessor President [Vladimir] Putin, wants to control history," he says.

"And he wants to control history as a means of controlling the present. This is the classic George Orwell scenario."

'Hysterical reaction'

Many Russians, though, agree with their president.

Natalia Narochnitskaya, a former deputy in the Russian parliament and now a member of the new Historical Truth Commission, says that she is surprised by what she terms the "almost hysterical reaction" in the West.

"In the Western media especially, there is a certain prejudice against Russia and Russian history," she says.

"They always feel that Russia since, you know, Ivan the Terrible, is a certain country which is off the European civilisation."


“ In August there will be such a yelling about the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, saying that that was the step that led to the Second World War ”
Natalia Narochnitskaya, member of the Historical Truth Commission
Ask a few more questions, though, and these two apparently separate views begin to converge.

At least, they agree on what the key issue is - World War II. And here lies the clue as to the real reason for the establishment of the new commission.

This is what appears to anger today's Russian historical establishment: accounts of Red Army crimes on the march to Berlin; assertions by the Baltic countries and others in Eastern Europe that Soviet forces came as occupiers as much as liberators; any suggestion that Stalin's Soviet Union and Nazi Germany were anything but complete opposites and bitter enemies.

Here, perhaps, there is a clue as to the timing of the commission's founding.

Next month sees the 70th anniversary of the non-aggression pact between the USSR and Hitler's Germany, something Ms Narochnitskaya expects the West to make a lot of noise about.

"In August there will be such a yelling about the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, saying that that was the step that led to the Second World War, and that Germany and the Soviet Union were two equal, disgusting, totalitarian monsters."

Nationalist sentiment

Why does this matter today? Do these arguments have any great importance beyond the walls of universities? In Russia, the answer is yes.


“ So many people are speaking about strong, Orthodox Russia, military power... The commission is partly a response to this atmosphere ”
Tamara Eidelman Moscow history teacher
The country sees its victory over Hitler's forces as the greatest moment of the 20th Century.

The war is sometimes discussed in the news media as if it were a recent event, not increasingly distant history.

Any attempt to tarnish the glory of that triumph is seen as a deliberate attempt to make Russia look bad.

Russia's past haunts its present. Recognising that, the authorities want to rule the version of the past which dominates today.

Tamara Eidelman, who teaches history at a Moscow High School, feels surrounded by nationalist sentiment.

"So many people are speaking about strong, Orthodox Russia, military power," she says.


"It is something that is very strong in historical tradition and in popular opinion. This commission is partly a response to this atmosphere."

The creation of this commission seems to go to the heart of what troubles modern Russia.

The chaos which followed the collapse of communism left many Russians deeply distrustful of politics and officialdom.

President Medvedev has complained of the corruption and "legal nihilism" which plague his country.

Russia's leaders today know that they need this shining, sacred, memory of victory to give their people something to believe in.

In the near future, it may even be backed up in law.

The Russian parliament is on its summer break at the moment, but legislation is being considered - legislation that would make it a criminal offence to "infringe on historical memory in relation to events which took place in the Second World War".

James Rodgers was formerly the BBC's Moscow correspondent.

Story from BBC NEWS:
BBC NEWS | Europe | Russia acts against 'false' history

Published: 2009/07/24 08:55:00 GMT

© BBC MMIX
 
I am all for Russia's resurgence, but if they are going to build more nukes, then its gonna be bad news for the whole world. More nukes = more risk of terrorists getting one + more risk of accidents (chernobyl). I hope they modify their missiles rather than assembling more warheads.



Damn! Is it me or does it sound like they are gonna put nukes in space?

It does sound a lot like that. It would be a big mistake though. The U.S. has poured billions into research for weapon systems that could be adapted for this. The only thing holding back further testing is the treaty banning weapons in space.

The U.S. is also having problems with an aging nuclear force. Congress has refused to allocate money to upgrade. Maybe now they will.
 
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